Chloroplast Outer Membrane β-Barrel Proteins Use Components of the General Import Apparatus
Author(s) -
Philip M. Day,
Kentaro Inoue,
Steven M. Theg
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
the plant cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.324
H-Index - 341
eISSN - 1532-298X
pISSN - 1040-4651
DOI - 10.1105/tpc.19.00001
Subject(s) - chloroplast , transit peptide , chloroplast membrane , microbiology and biotechnology , protein targeting , biology , bacterial outer membrane , nicotiana benthamiana , transmembrane protein , chloroplast dna , membrane , membrane protein , biochemistry , thylakoid , plastid , gene , receptor , escherichia coli
Chloroplasts evolved from a cyanobacterial endosymbiont that resided within a eukaryotic cell. Due to their prokaryotic heritage, chloroplast outer membranes contain transmembrane β-barrel proteins. While most chloroplast proteins use N-terminal transit peptides to enter the chloroplasts through the translocons at the outer and inner chloroplast envelope membranes (TOC/TIC), only one β-barrel protein, Toc75, has been shown to use this pathway. The route other β-barrel proteins use has remained unresolved. Here we use in vitro pea ( Pisum sativum ) chloroplast import assays and transient expression in Nicotiana benthamiana to address this. We show that a paralog of Toc75, outer envelope protein 80 kD (OEP80), also uses a transit peptide but has a distinct envelope sorting signal. Our results additionally indicate that β-barrels that do not use transit peptides also enter the chloroplast using components of the general import pathway.
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